By Dermidio Juez PerezThen, Presidential candidate Donald J. Trump, excited his crowd by making allegations that if elected President he would repeal and replace Obama Care. Trump’s promises included a new and improved coverage engineered by Republican which would cover more people, reduce their premiums, and avoid cutting Medicaid.Trump’s Republicans have recently agreed on supporting a bill to replace Obama Care. However, such plan has been greatly criticized by both Democrat and Republican.The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) released information on Monday March 13th indicating that the bill supported by Trump’s administration would cause millions of Americans to lose their insurance and it will raise costs for the most vulnerable populations.The Trump administration claims that no one currently insured will lose coverage under this plan, however, reality is contradicting the President’s claims. According to the CBO, 14 million fewer people would be insured in 2018 and 24 million fewer people would have insurance in 2026 under Trump’s healthcare plan. Not only would million loss coverage but its affordability is also being questioned. Trump promised “much lower deductibles.” In a speech in Las Vegas during his campaign he promised “great health care for a fraction of the price.” The CBO concluded that the proposed replacement would initially rise insurance cost by 15% to 20% above the Affordable Care Act. However, it is expected that it would eventually decrease.It is important to point out that costs will not go down for everyone. Insurance cost for the most vulnerable members of society, the elderlies, will continue to rise. The CBP projects the average 21 year old could expect a 20-25% decrease in their premiums. However, a 64-year-old would see their premiums go up by 20 to 25%. For instance, a 64-year-old making $26,500 a year would pay an average of $1,700 for their health insurance in 2026 but under the proposed bill the same 64-year-old would pay $14,600.Trump is also breaking his promise to leave Medicaid untouched. In an interview last year Trump stated “I’m not going to cut Social Security like every other Republican and I’m not going to cut Medicare or Medicaid.” During the Obama administration Medicaid was expanded to cover about 11 million more people, but Trump’s plan would reduce Medicaid spending by $880 billion by 2026 leaving 14 million Medicaid patients without coverage.